The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-05-27, Page 51.17".4.7_".'"_' •�'�
Who -Loves Mother Best?'
"1 love you, mother," said 'little John,
Then, forgetting his work, his i ap
• • ' went ('11,
And he .waS off to the .pbarden ^w▪ ing
'A .queer sound came from the sofa,
'where -►Sorrily had been sulking be- .
cause his arithmetic was hard, 'He
had listened •t•rossly`enotigh when he
heard ,,his name, - but tlt.e idea of a
;4e,ks'ilig his mother the wood to sunny day's7 kicking' things round
•. linrig: .. . made hire titter..
�Uni•le Jasper'wentan as if he had
"I /Ic>vt' 'ydti, nlottrer,", staid' little. \e11► not:heart! '"' hat wouldn'.t do at ..ally
1 love You- better titan longue can at t ,
tali:, . yea might say Dark Day .or Stormy
s"kins:ab►< tt.:a u .pairted e, f=he tlstaurTr;—attto'v'-y",uv�uclalei hircy o Ar .?_41"ee
_ *; "_e ti � d ,•
t
' • (iy, •
'1'il1 her mother rejoiced when she ".I don't. }relieve I'had.ever thought
1 went to play, about it in that -way," Mrs. Day said,
•`'It is a rather queer name. We must
"1 love you mother.,"'said little r'an, c'allw}iitn by hitt real name,' I suppose,
"To -(day 1'11 help you alt'! caan. Or we might say 'Stilt,'" she added.
Ildw glad '.I -x111 school dor.sn't keep."
And- site .roeke(1 the baby till he fell • Uncle .Jasper' laughed. - 'That
That
asleep. , ' - •wouldn't -help-.much, Son •Day •-Sun
day! Imagine Sunday in a .bad hum_ -
'1'hen• steppint.; stiffly s,ll( took• the o•t! W'i'hy, Sunday is supposed to be
• •• broom, . the loveliest of the days! No, `Wil -
:And swept the floor and dusted the Liam, }•:ustace' Would be better than
room. ata
Busy tial' happy all day, was she, yrs. Day agreed. "I hope no one
Helpful 'and thoughtful sa4 child could else 'has notized how -the two names
• be' sound together," she ,added. -
"love you mother," again,Ihey, said, c`I don't see how they could ..hells
Three little children going to bed.. '
How do you think that Mother guessed
Which of therm really loved her
. best?
PRINCESS PAT AN
This charming photograph, taken at Clarence House, London; shows
Lady Patricia Ramsay (Princess Patricia) and her little son, Alexan'der Ar-
noticingit," said Uncle Jasper. thur Alphonse M ule. It fs the •first picture taken of them.
Without. a word .Sonny slipped out.---.
. - '
of the room; his face, .yvas •red. trust .still traverse a distance sof •mil, The LandSmalt.
The next . 'morning his mother lions of light years before reaching ‘Between the shipsgo out
thought he had better not, wear his the nearest of the "spiral nebulae."the capes
Sunny. Day. new o v Frcoat• to school. .At that, These "spiral nebulae" are not real- To meett the open yea,
His real earne was William Eustac.,e Sonny begantss storm.; . ly nebulae at all. Though seen by the . Against a wild tide torn abtlut
•
telescope as mere Patches of 'bright- ' • And wind "tossed ceaselessly.
Behind., the still.bay harbor lies;
• No buoy bells loudly ring; , .
D
H
E
R
BA
BY.
Peter Writes About Christian Living
"Wherefore laying aside all malice, then also said, "Ye are the light•ct the '
and all guile, .and-hypacrisies, and en- world." ' We ought to love •our lives
vies, and .all evil speaking,•- because they give us such an oppor
For ye were as. sheep going astray; tunity to make the world .ready to re-
but are now returned unto the Shep- 'ceiVe the Christ when He comes again.
• herd and Bishop of your souls." --I. Every morning when we awa'a there '
Peter, 2, 1.5, 11, 12, 19.25. • should he in us a spirit of ' delight that
Thesetrio letters of St. Peter ore we have another day in which to help
•
salt we haw,: of his iti ritittgs.'Sc,:11e have forward the eau:;e of riglttoousuesf,
th(;,1 ):t that the Gospel accift'ditlg to No gloom, no looking backward with.
Mark may have been written .un
weary eyes cf longing, but a pressing
der Peter's guidance,
because 5t. forward tow anfds the vision oa per- .
l.sat It is mentioned iti this litter (j feet , world redeemed by Jesus• Christ
such shoujd he our" lives.
Peter 5: 1 ) i -n a very loving and
in- .,- .
timate tiC':1)•. Birt .we,knovv St. Peter, ...Rules' for Christian, Life, '6 ,
wrote these two letters to belevers', • Blit St. Peter knows the weakness
• both. Jews and Gentiles; and Htey are of our mortal na't'ure. He-lias ;had the.-
lull of .beailtiful sand eolnfc;rtir>g. •roes- e pexientc•e; hiuiself. -So he gl-s s sun-
suess • '!'hese: epi' ties; or •lette.i dry adrnonitiorns regarding Christian -
which' St. James, 'St.. Peter, St. Paul, living, and as we. read them v.. know'
S"ts• John 'sestet `' I `;dstele...•ytrotre -as .tale hx,sw pravta•cal• they. are:' "Honor all'.
pt,i Bri• it'r1ideEtt44•te'sn•,-are 'flail••.01- men: Levee- rl e,• by otheshood. • Fear
the Most inlportartt truths. They show God. Honor the king." First, -there is
us how the Church grew,..and • they the• respect for humanity .in general.
bring before us the. rapid spread. of
('hristiaan•ity throughout • the • then -
known v•orld ; but, above' all else,
they reveal to us Jesus. Christ and
His will ;in such a Ray .that we cannot
err retarding the -truth cif His redemp-
tion if we read them carefully.
Day, .•blit he ' was. • nicknamed Sonny' "Thaat will do, William • l:ustace,
hetero •he .was a month old,; and iron:, said his •tnothel•, The • two names n'ess•in the sky, they. have been proved
that tont. cis no .one knew hint by any sounded very stern. to be composed of enormous multi.
i•ther name. Sonny was.Pot nits-ays "ICS half past eight ,now, William tudes of Suns. They are, in fact other But the ships -fare into distant skies,
Forth finely venturing.
For some must always sail to find- an
unknown' .port. of Call, •
Anil some must still remain' behind
• nor venture •-fdrth at all. .
I li1eto. watch the white sliips go'
Dowit to a mystic • sea ;' .
And high adventures all men know
'Surge -through the heart of me;
And yet I turn and cast my eye
Around the great still hay,
And in illy heart I know that 1
'Shall nes er Sail away. ,
a guca.l.natured• boy: • When matters : E(a5tace," put in Uncle Jasper. universes.
went sm"cthly he vias pleasa.it.; 'brit .Sonny stopped storming. Were Marvels of Creat'
when they did. not :he was• likely to' they really; going to •call him William Some of them are as much as.1'0,000,,
lose his temper and to be 'a long tima Eustace? ' •Without another. word -he 000 .light years •distant frorim us.• If
do 'finding. it. .• - i + put n his coat and started for sehool.f you were. that far away you tould not
'One day his Uncle Jasper from ' At noon, every time the boys shout- see our universe with the unaided eye,
Nova Scotia 'came to pay a long visit..' ed '}vis old familiar name Sonny look -
"I've always •.wanted • to meet • my only- ed uncomfortable. Suppose they, too,
:great-nephew," said the old _gentle--; sno-alai take to calling him by his long
• man, looking at him hard over • his solemn name? ' He w.uld not object
spectacles. •a to Bill, perhaps; but' how would it
• They soon became firm friends; 'sound to hear, "It's your strike, Wil- form.. We do not know, but some day
Uncle Jasper thought he had never • Liam Fu$tace!" •or, "William Lustace we'may find *out. One reason why we •
seen a finer boy. But after a whine ` Day •has the ball'-" cannot easily determine this interest-
. something went 'wrong, and then l . He worried rbout the mate,. Dila, the ing point. is that we are ne,ar. the- cen• nor. Some .must seek the Orient and
Sonny's uncle saw hint 'in t' r • home and sulked a little too' lie ire `of the disk that we call the Milky
light.
and even through a •high-poi+-er teles-
cope our . galaxy would appear, only: a
little -patch, of brightness.
It is now surmised, 'that. oar own,
Universe may have a similar spiral'
silo ::e way 1 t • some forever roam
. was sulking
' '•� � �Uncle J - � hiS• elbow, -Qui• own universe
ght, so hard that he jump Ztiay.
Mid some remain behind content to
"1 notice William Fustattte •is al;' ay., when his asper,• atinov es through c.rltise about at home.
called Sonny," Une'le Jasper rernaark-'sudden'ly spoke. space at the enormous speed of some
• ▪ .ed one day; "]low do you spell the' "Hellos Sonny nay!" said ' Uncle hundreds of miles per second. The Fine coni trees. llel out Europe s
•?lamee-.with 'an 'o' or with a 'u'?" i Jasper. average 4peed of the "spiral `nebulae" Tuvlai•d the rising sun,
• . Mr . Day. Icoked up' duiekly in sur- i All as once Sonny realized how bad- is 4$0 miles per second. .Is it to be gey'ond the rapes, .and all the day.
prise:. • "Why, with an •'o'•, of course," 1 ly that name went with such a mood supposed that our galaxy and -those '
1 lie great• ships •one•'by •ore '
she answered. ..as' he was in. He stopped frowning others -are moving about a common- Ge down the bay, across the Roads,
"I thought . it ' might 'be the
way," rejoined Uncle' Jasper.. "Sbme-
e other) and burst' out laughing. centre? There is no end to the possi. To seek a far wide lane
After •that,
he laughed more and bilities of speculation opened 'up b3 And still no restless spirit goads
haw `Sunny' goes with `Day.'' He mere and teedharder to stay in .a the discoveries here outlined. Me out and on again.
�hu:•1<led: "Tlui you a fee iiut'.0 aciW good humor. • For some must.:~tan(1 upon the. deck to t
And wily, should we not respect hu-
manity when we remember that we
are all the children of God? He
created us in His own image, after
His likeness (Gen. is 1-26). And when
the day of redemption came His Son • --
beeame -plan, takieg upon Himself the
is
This letter of • St. Peter lull been human form'and so making it once
called "an' exhortation . to Christian more worthy of honor. It is a sad
living," and there is a loving simplicity thing to despise .men. . Alice yet it
is
and earnestness, about it that appeals a sin into which we so easily fall.
to us at once. We remember how . Love the brotherhood—so S. Peter .
Troch St: Peter passed through as, spealcs• again. The "Communion . of .
with St. John, •he preached the gospel Saints," .. we express it in our creed:
in Jerusalem, and we recall his im- for Christians were called saints in
pulsive nature which in the early days. Peter's day. This brotherhood it that,
of his 'discipleship so often led him blessed relationship to Christ which
astray. And these very experiences binds those .who love Him very closet
make his words the stronger,sbecause ly together: It is, bigger than
he wrote them out- of Ibe fullness of nomination Or mode of worship. 'It is
his heart. 'b• bigger than nationality or. language.
Iloly joy is the keynote ofthefirst.Itis bigger than• one generation and
it is not bounded by the river of death,
chapter of St. Peter's letter; and then. „.,tlgels; .;ir.d living saints are dead,
in -the second' chapter he briegs us But one communion make:
definite messages as -to faith and prat •',11•join in f;liri:�t their living Head,
dee. We find something here uh,lth
we do not find in his great sermons And of His love partake."
(Acts, ii and xi, 'namely. a loving, per- What would Peter ray about our''un-
sonal appeal founded upon faith in happy divisionls" if he came among us
Jesus Christ. He tells 'us first of all to -day? Can we really be such Chris -
that we must be as children; free from tians as he urges us to be in his
guile and nourished by the truth"a epistle if we do not love the brother-
Christ.:hood enough to commune with them?'
"Fear God." Fear .means reverence.
Not Probation, hitt Education. We are not a; raid• of God onr Father.
The law of spiritual .growth is a di -
'and
we revere Him for His goodnes
vine law, yet it follows the rtaural 'and His love. When we disregard'
law by which things 'grow. As the His commandments, wheh we set up
stones are fitted Into a buil,diug, .each a code of , morals regardless, of His
stone filling its own -place, so we are divine law, when we follow our own;
to he fitted by the dear.•lias•ter to-do wills instead of His will—there is no
our work and live our life as we build reverence. Arid when we forget Hirn.
upon the one blessed fouudation. Per- neglect prayer, eat without . giving
haps there is no truth .so i:ecessary thanks, do not read the Bible, there Is
for us to learn to=day es this of grow- no reverence. The man who knows '•
ing to usefulnesM and strength by fol- God is his guide, who loves Him and
lowing Chriet. and using His means of seeks Ilim in prayer and tries to make
grace. •Sometimes we think of life as God's will his will -rte fears God.
probation; that we are lt;•ft here on . "Honor the king." We should
earth to see whether we will be honor hini by praying for him. W6
worthy to enter another higher life., Should. do our .part in .keeping the
But life •here is not probation; it is, peace. since no king can rule without
education. We are to learn, we are loyalty on the part of his. subjects.)
•Reverence for age and authority, -for
law' and order, for decency and purity,
for `reiri e� 'A'tree ancl' cle.aitliner ilii';
we most ,observe. •
St. Peter shows us how to like as -
true Christians. • We can 'thank God:
for, till, :servant of ,Chrilat, for''iie;
points for us the way of life. Rev. F.
th Light of the .world," and W. Tmkin 1,
Y
•. ' o grow, we are to make, the world beta.
the tvv'o names sound together? A _When Christmas .came. that year, Se8- '1lre-Baitoona.
boy would have to work hard to lire the mail brought a little silver watch
There
hear-•the--w-his•per-ittg lips,
The luring lips, that fly before the
. prows of ,outbound ships. •
I hold coiltentg+d men to be
The haarole st men of a11'; .
Yet some of these will evt►r,jie
Purs"ain,
But I am glad that such as I
Feel never the urge to roam.
But here, while questing ships go by>
May cruise about at.11ome.''
For some go down to the sea' in ships
at a breath of salty foam,
But some turn -backward to the land
and answer the call of home.
Sailors give the name of "fire bal-
up to that com'eination. Imagine a from Uncle Jasper. There was a, card looms", to huge jellyfishes, .sometimes
sunny day pouting, or kicl`.ing things with it -that -read, :"To tick away thg eight feet in diameter, which, often'
round!" :lours of a •'Sunny Day'!" • seen in great numbers at the surface of
---------- -- ------ the sea, look in the nighttime as if
enol•:i,('.1.-iy +1i4tant, are visible to the brightly illuminated... The phenomen-
rratiql taya am faint, hrtey objeots.
nicrly they were thought to be "ne-
i:ra3}trP' (rol`xil>•cise� of nveteoric or pos.
STELLAR SYSTEM' sibky gaseous matter); but bigger and
_ better telescopes have resolved them
into groups ,at myriad. stars. They are
distinct cosmic units --isolated sys-
tems, each of them comprising a .great
multitude of •suns syrhnletrically 'ar-
ranged about a center. in which', to the
.telescope, they appear as if massed.
Many Other Universes Go to .rake, for example, .a •cluster seen
Mitke Up the Whole - when the telescope is directed toward
of Creation. that part of the sky. where the constel-
lation Hercules is located. It is 36;
Within the last dozen years ;Astro- 000 light years distant from us. We
noulteal knowledge has for the first see it, therefore, not, as •it is tb-day,
time extended its range beyond the but as it was 360 centuries ago. Slime which are 'dropped to develop on their
limits of the stellar universe. Science the light, wilich brings to us a view own account, and also by splitting,•oz*
has begun to learn something of what of that cluster,..stasated on its way jelly -fish dividing into. two.
t? going cn c3utsldc. , . through the immensity of intervening Bathers at the .seashore are familiar
Wh:at we rail the universe halite' +1•prree, a tend 'human generations_ enough wiLia, •jeuyitaues, wad avoid.
galaxy of stars more commonly spoken have come 'and gone, and mankind them for fear of their stings. They
• of as the Milky Way. It contains per- has emerged from a vague and ante- have the • shape of an umbrella, from
haps :• billion suns, a great majority; of corded past. the r}largin of which hang numerous
v:lci".h are much lamer and hrlghter And this is one of the nearest of the 'tentacles (as much as thirty feet long
than•oltr own solar, orb. .Iii shape the 'globular star -clusters! Many of them in large specimens), armed with sting-
.
galaxy may be likened to a watch, and • are more than four times as far away ing eel . A big one can give a shock
the reason why the stars look thicker fram•us, and one, of them is more than compar le to that of an electric bat-
iti-a• kelt across the night sky is gimp- six times at distant. • tery. ,.
Iy that (►tar, upward gaze is directed Stars That Eclipse Ou'r Sun. In the Coosa Valley, Alabama, has
through the disk edgewise --just ag ft
A staras small as, our sun would been found a mine of fossil jellyfishes,
• ,• row of lamps on a bridge is clustered not be visible to the most powerful ha here they may be picked tap by
when viewed from one end. telescope at the distance of the crus- thousands on the surface of the ground
Light travels 186,000 miles a second. ter above described., it is, then, mani- casts of the living creatutei•. that is
The distance it.travels in.a twelve" fest that alt of the stars in that clue-
to Say• made; it is estimated, 20,000,-
"'lentil is called a. "light year." Thus ter which are revealed to the steles -000 years ago. That region was then
one understands what is meant by the cope are of giant size. Many of them sen lli(rttorn, and' In the shallows, jelly -
statement that the thickness of the are certainly nitre than 1,000 times as fish, became buried in mud, which lister
galactic dtsk•.is roughly estimated nt bright as our sun. Hold these points hardened into rock. +
:1,000 light years and its diameter at ill mind consider the 7'h It w•a3 1on>~ bc+tore iiia App11xch
.30,000. light years.. ' A ray of light i alt �lount•ain
ttaartitlg from otic' edge would require.
• 1n(I centatrle.c to reach the oPP°•ite
$e, oa-d G▪ rasp of Human Miod.
So Nasti this universe of stag.:'s Ilett.
iie human mind is unable 10 grasp its
a:
1111•1,.•' y• We have long been lat'cn�-
tt�1:;Nti Li ri,riar(1 it ay rcprmwiltInk the
i�tn.' But recent antro•
WHAT IS GOING ON OUT-
SIDE OUR UNIVERSE.
escence. '
1n sone ways jellyfishes are the
'most remarkable of existing animals.
They are 99 per cent. water, the
quantity of ,solid matter' they contain,
being so small that a specimen al-
lowdd to dry . on a sheet of blotting
paper will leave. ,behind nothing but a
slight stain. Somebody has called
them "animated sea -water."
They do not live more `than a year,
and in that, short time the largest
species will grow from the size of a
penny to the dimensions of the afore-
mentioned "fire balloons." Their
method of reproduction is by buds,
; tact that one • .
recent photographic exposure by the s were uplifted, and the
sixtyinch , reflecting ^telescope on rocks in which the, jellyfishes are
:Monet tVilson' showed 30,0:00 Stan's in • tonna embedded ;ire the oldest sedi-
t easluater, and youswill have a notion nlenfary deposits that Contain. fossils,.
'of the immensity of this Particular ,1f .is thus.manifest that -creatures of
••cosmic unit" outside our universe, this ore1 er were�amcvu g the earliest in
Recent observation has shown- that habitantS of the earth.
this star -cluster (as well as others), is Net they are in no way different
not really. globular but ,of` the shape
of• an oblate spheroid, which may per-
t
--theareepike
;;pare at speed of 200 miles a second.
and seems to be traavelling toward our
universe, It `this he true, it should
reach the Milky Way in 60,000.000 of
our years.
Imagine yourself arrived at the out-
ermost of the known star•clusters.
220.000 light years distant. Though •
tar outside of the stellar universe, you
would have made only a first step in
ing.:0 'cru:tet-I, tliongh so the Palfrey to *butt is beyond. Von
•
1 I1t - „ I(� I is :'1105
at:
1\.':t,l0':1 »0.nl of universes
,;,11, ,:: the litter being' actually
v ale; 001 ranee Of W; ?0, ,Hided by
c l i ul 1,'le,eopes.
r;,a., ,, t•(,alsideting these other
eta (•;;, :((:never, let us speak of the
• +l'(si "globular star - clusters,"
s; 1 eeelltly ascertained, are
t!', 11. , �,. - t ► outside of our own uni•
ter and so to gain betterment for our-
selves. There is where ase find-tt}eIn=
spiratioA of life. It is not sitting still
and waiting; it. is not simply trying
-to be good; ' but it is an active ad -
Sallee under OUT- Lord's guidance,' -it
is the service of the king Who said,
Aid• for Aviators.
Naval aviation stations are situated
on the seashore, for the obvi•
ous reason that fledging beginners in
Abe flying art can learn with compara-
tive safety where here is water: to fall
into ' •
At each such station is kept in coin -
mission a *to -called "motor -sled," which
m a gasoline boat with a flat bottom
and• a square bow, built for swift skip-
ping
kipping over the waves.
When a beginner goes up in the air,
the boat is in readiness for a • prompt•
rescue in case of accident. An este-
tion officer, provided *with a pair of
binoculars, is suitably posted ,for ob-
servation. It is his business to direct
the rescue, if danger threatens.
On hoard the boat are two .enlisted
men of the hospital corps, a third. Plan
to run the engine and a fourth to steer
the craft. 'the first two are trained
in first-aid work, and carry with them
such necessaries as it requires.
If the pupil drops. themotorboat is
on its way -to hint before he can reach.
the water. A - Casualty •undej• such
circumstances is., almost • impossible,
and the flier. realizing this fart.'tains
n confidence that is an immense' help
to himin learning.
The Age of Niagara.
To the question, allow old is Niaga-
ra Falls?" geologists have l'eturned re•
from the jellyfishes of to -d4 The na- plies varying by tins of thousands .of•'
tives ot• the Coosa Valley call them 'ears, At first it wits esiiniated that persecutions hag iniilcte;l, Upon the (�f illi' 1/4.4,111;1151% •t�l,,w .
y "Papists" •r; a in(lhrsed by the Partin- by aaj1p ttti:i�;
"fossil 'tern " the Niagara River carne into existence
.11is t'a '. The gunpewrie,r plot ! sok
Hedgehog Quills.Useful. °. Smith's System. ,
Principally because that **isn't his
name, we'll call him Smith. Smith
bought an automobile.. He paid $2,150
for it: lie allowed no one to drive is
animal, the eomrtion hedgehog, tot but himself. Ile kept it in a new ga: -
come into ;prominence. Some one not age --a. weather-proof structure with a
long ago discovered that hedgehogs' cement floor. • Every 500 miles he
quills make excellent needles for changed the oil in the crank .case,
phonographs ---in fact • they bring out For the first '1,000 miles he 'ran the
the sound more effectively than metal -car no faster than Zia, miles an'hour.
needles. The walls of a hedgehog • Then he bought a tractor. for hie
fartn. It cost $2,900. He hired a tramp
mechanic at $3.50 a *day to :lin it,
When not in use, he left -it in the oi4
corral back of the barn. As long ais
nothing 'went wrong. no one thought
imagine' its short legs and dumpy' of en changing the oil The second, .
body would permit. It has a stofnach 1 d y he took the heaviest plow on til;
of strong digestive paver, eating the a ` down Tei an M- alfalfa iietd, ptlt
bark of •trees, earthworms, slugs. the dirk`" down as far as they would
snails. frogs, dead birds nr.d eggs.: go; and said to the *driver: Now,
Several years ago the :hole sprang
into importance because its. skin'be.-
canle fashionable for. women's coats.
It is the turn now of another lowly
quill are of a hard horny substance,
and the partly hollow interior con-
tains, a pith.
The hedgehog prowls at nig)tt, and
runs with more agility than orale would
step en her. Let's see what she's gooai .
The early hatched pullet begins' to for."
-lay •early in the fall and continues to .Smith is lathe:' a (oilmen 1.::;n1.=
lay when eggs are high in price.
London's women police are paid at .....�.
A good nozzle
the rate of $7.2'I a week during the as one, of the -mood
I important parts of the• spray nutftt•
prbbaationilryl period patrols.
Guy. Fawkes Powder Piot
Al the ope'eing of Parliament recent- eyed with cos' and faggot?. :i'• •aaees
ly it!'laindon the initial ceremony was l',; was • the da'e appointed :a'r ,he
:1 solemn auarch by the ";etmmen of the '-h;ow•ep• ser:t 1se. Ione is pe:: •:•' «;is
*Guard through the vaults under the •,to open i7ar'.1an.ent
legislative buildings. In searchof, ex- It ,was otl;�' a'' 'lie last 7110:11e;:; • ".
plosive., ' • . . , the c'.orsplraca. :Fits ea:eases, (;. t: 2
5.10., November 5. 160a Enid e: a
'Chil; Verforltlattc•er'nevev onlitteo waded the' t eiler ,and '‘;.n(1 1•;1'.1 ,s
.such an occasion. bat•ks back to the there, vti.ith a) ,Lai;,; ia1:'� y;,'
di eoverY of 1114' famoes 1;U1100*(1'ov 1
aacl'(111plicer
plot, iti 16u5... _ _ executed.
,lames T. wt(' then king 110 w.t, a 1n1 .1ar.usary uf• ;t •:•.� ', .s :e
religiousq fanil1 i_t•. aild 'the 0honlin'uhle a1.1`1)nit'nt c`\, (e�=r 1 Its .:p; ' e • is
.1.
1 * . �_.... .. -:..i -...�,- �,.r ....- .......»«.. �,yi ,nary ''"
Cest.'atnm and Incubaflan rerlodT I ato -sz
t} live thousand years ago. Tater e:(11-1--
•11110 WI! 1 11 a aet' (fir'rl j�tt•:1 9i1('c't' Anil ill:e at,
(lows, 2$3 days; marcs, .'140 days;I It„ or9ginated with. Robert t'>;tpsb} , n Fur,.c r;; a fent;a, , t .:
ewes, t50 days; sow's, 112 days; hon 11in was reduced to only twelve tttcvtts
and years. Lyell increased the esti. - R nlan Catholic gentleman of good ti
eggs, tnenty-ono days; pigeon eggs, on W;14 ti•+e� 1 itnh g r f c;l;•. ,i.
fan111y. Fawkes and a few other con- in claps, 0 H -,•sat h(+esa ;ease
seventeen .days;. turkey, goose, duck mate again to thirty-five thousand aptratora' met at his house at Lamh(.•�1. for the halrl,, : a' in I.i:.t `1:' .
Y�
and guinea eggs, twenty-eight to years, and still later other sclerNsts
where the scheme wes hatched. " •'Fuel tib repienl'ta, tl t' i' ' ,i
thirty days. reduced it to nfiout nine, thousandTho plotters--lyaired a renal*. newly'.all'day' in .141;'' 'i1" s : - • ' •
,} years.
" At one period; it appears, many vacate(j, by n coal dealer. beneath the ; an(3 'more titan .�'.1 ; ii':\ �t • : c•
"I will not borrow trouble, said the �tt,e:.� 1 � ;,• ..�c :1 S •,1
thousands of years sago. the he'ght of :louse ,,f lairds. •T}lirty-,ix barrels , buret : 1' t:'i
thrifty woman,\"c�en if 1 have to go ,, 420 fort. of gunpowder were' stored there, cps.; mid: 't '.,
the falls way
without 't, _ •
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